Genes (Jul 2021)

Non-Syndromic Autosomal Dominant Hearing Loss: The First Italian Family Carrying a Mutation in the <i>NCOA3</i> Gene

  • Paola Tesolin,
  • Anna Morgan,
  • Michela Notarangelo,
  • Rocco Pio Ortore,
  • Maria Pina Concas,
  • Angelantonio Notarangelo,
  • Giorgia Girotto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes12071043
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. 1043

Abstract

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Hearing loss (HL) is the most frequent sensory disorder, affecting about 1–3 per 1000 live births, with more than half of the cases attributable to genetic causes. Despite the fact that many HL causative genes have already been identified, current genetic tests fail to provide a diagnosis for about 40% of the patients, suggesting that other causes still need to be discovered. Here, we describe a four-generation Italian family affected by autosomal dominant non-syndromic hearing loss (ADNSHL), in which exome sequencing revealed a likely pathogenic variant in NCOA3 (NM_181659.3, c.2909G>C, p.(Gly970Ala)), a gene recently described as a novel candidate for ADNSHL in a Brazilian family. A comparison between the two families highlighted a series of similarities: both the identified variants are missense, localized in exon 15 of the NCOA3 gene and lead to a similar clinical phenotype, with non-syndromic, sensorineural, bilateral, moderate to profound hearing loss, with a variable age of onset. Our findings (i.e., the identification of the second family reported globally with HL caused by a variant in NCOA3) further support the involvement of NCOA3 in the etiopathogenesis of ADNSHL, which should, thus, be considered as a new gene for autosomal dominant non-syndromic hearing loss.

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